What I find incomprehensible in this «kernel oops» is the fact that it
revolves around ECC RAM. Why would the OS be looking to load the kernel
module for ECC RAM? My Bios does not contain any visible assignment for
ECC RAM, though I believe that the Phenom II memory controller has the
capacity to operate ECC RAM if this type of memory is installed. The
only setting I find in the bios which might affect the operation of ECC
RAM is this «ganged» and «unganged» setting under DRAM Configuration,
where as far as I know «ganged» offers ECC RAM better functionality but
this is not the same thing as ECC RAM enabled (for this there is no
setting and I have the latest Bios for the 790FXT motherboard from
Gigabyte.

Still the question remains, why does the os check the bios to see if ECC
RAM is enabled? This strikes me as wrong, unless of course the RAM were
actually ECC. I know that I am using non-ECC RAM so even if my bios had
a setting for ECC RAM this setting would not be enabled and of course
this would mean that the module should not be loaded—but then why does
this trigger a kernel alert? It doesn't make any sense unless the Kernel
thinks that the RAM is ECC and that therefore the kernel module for ECC
RAM should be loaded but can't be loaded because the BIOS setting is not
enabled—so where would the information that the RAM is ECC be coming
from?

-- 
EDAC amd64: WARNING: ECC is NOT currently enabled by the BIOS. Module will NOT 
be loaded.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/422536
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